Hi All, I have a delco remy tach drive dist here with a red band that reads 1112021 DELCO REMY 2H 2

Can anybody tell me what these numbers mean?
Thanks!
Bob

gbvette62

02-10-2009 12:39 PM

1112021 is late production 1970 for a 350/350. 2H 2 I believe is dating. I'm having a senior moment, but I think it works out as follows: "2" second day of the month, "H" August, "2" second shift.

Bob Onit

02-10-2009 12:58 PM

Thank you very much! :thumbs:

Bob Onit

02-10-2009 03:25 PM

Can anybody please explain what the raised casting numbers at the top of the casings represent?
I have two different units.
One says 190 and the other says 691

Thanks.

Vetteaddiction

02-10-2009 04:20 PM

Bob,

I believe you have a replacement distributor. The distributor is for a 1970 350/350, but the id band says 2 August, 1972. It's yr/mo/day. Of course, you could have the wrong id band, they're easy to remove and replace.

The casting number on distributors has never been a source of any meaningful info. Still a mystery.

Chris

Bob Onit

02-10-2009 04:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vetteaddiction
(Post 1568894708)

Bob,

I believe you have a replacement distributor. The distributor is for a 1970 350/350, but the id band says 2 August, 1972. It's yr/mo/day. Of course, you could have the wrong id band, they're easy to remove and replace.

The casting number on distributors has never been a source of any meaningful info. Still a mystery.

Chris

Hmm.... Now I'm a little more confused.
Thanks very much (I think) ;)

Anybody else want to confirm?

Thanks guys!

Bob Onit

02-11-2009 09:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vetteaddiction
(Post 1568894708)

Bob,

I believe you have a replacement distributor.
Chris

Chris, would a "replacement" unit still be considered "correct" to a person that is looking for a proper year distributor?

Heres the issue I'm having.
I bought a spare tach drive dist for my '73.
I bought it from a local guy that was parting out a '70 350/350.
I sent the dist to Lars and he rebuilt it completely.
New shaft, bushings, drive gear, coupling, vacuum control, ect: then Lars also set the advance curve on his SUN machine.
I installed it on my beefed up L-48, it worked flawlessly.
Shortly after this I bought a ZZ-4 and went with an HEI tach drive.

Bottom line is that I have a lot of money into this distributor and I want to sell it but I don't want to advertise it as a 1970 unless I'm positive that it is indeed from a 1970.

Can anybody tell me if there is an accurate procedure to verify the year of this distributor? :crazy:
I have attached a couple of pictures so you can see the unit and the numbers.

There are some numbers under your cam and weight plate (under the plate that holds your springs and weights). Should be CCW xxx . Plates have different slot lengths that allow different amounts of centrifigal advance. Some people have a cross reference to actual part numbers that can help narrow down the application.

The other way is to look at the part number on the vacuum can, but I bet Lars swapped that out. Did he set it up for your L48? If so, it won't be right for a 70 350/350, different specs.

Chris

Bob Onit

02-11-2009 11:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vetteaddiction
(Post 1568904878)

Bob,

There are some numbers under your cam and weight plate (under the plate that holds your springs and weights). Should be CCW xxx . Plates have different slot lengths that allow different amounts of centrifigal advance. Some people have a cross reference to actual part numbers that can help narrow down the application.

The other way is to look at the part number on the vacuum can, but I bet Lars swapped that out. Did he set it up for your L48? If so, it won't be right for a 70 350/350, different specs.

Chris

Chris, Lars did change out the can, he uses one type and one type only (B28?) or something like that.
I have no idea how he set the curve, he did it on his SUN machine.
The L-48 was probably close to 280 hp gross.
I didn't consider that aspect of the setup but I guess that it would matter seeing that one engine will wind up quicker than another depending on the power.

Oh well, maybe I'll just sell it as a completely rebuilt unit that may or may not need to be re-curved depending upon the application.

Thanks Chris! :cheers:

redvetracr

02-14-2009 06:51 AM

you have whats known as a service replacement distributor....in your case it`s a rebuilt, recurved service replacement....